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uftp(1) DragonFly General Commands Manual uftp(1)
NAME
uftp - Encrypted UDP based ftp with multicast - server
SYNOPSIS
uftp [ -R txrate ] [ -L logfile ] [ -B udp_buf_size ]
[ -g max_log_size ] [ -n max_log_count ]
[ -Y keytype ] [ -h hashtype ] [ -w sigtype ]
[ -e keyextype[:curve] ] [ -c ] [ -m max_nak_count ]
[ -k key_file ] [ -K key_length | curve ] [ -l ] [ -T ]
[ -b block_size ] [ -t ttl ] [ -Q dscp ] [ -z | -Z ]
[ -I interface ] [ -p port ] [ -u source_port ]
[ -j proxylist_file ] [ -q ] [ -f ] [ -y ] [ -U UID ]
[ -x log_level ] [ -W txweight ]
[ -H host[,host...] | -H @hostlist_file
| -F restart_file ] [ -X exclude_file ]
[ -M pub_multicast_addr ] [ -P priv_multicast_addr ]
[ -N max_nak_pct ] [ -C cc_type ] [ -o ][ -D dest_name ]
[ -E base_dir[,base_dir... ] ] [ -S status_file ]
[ -r init_grtt[:min_grtt:max_grtt] ] [ -s robust ]
{ -i list_file | file [ file... ] }
DESCRIPTION
uftp is the server process of the UFTP suite. It sends one or more
files to one or more receivers via multicast with optional encryption.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-R txrate
The transmission speed in Kbps. Specifying -1 for this value
results in data being sent as fast as the network interface will
allow. Using a value of -1 is recommended only if the network
path between the server and all clients is as fast as the
server's local interface, and works best in a gigabit
environment. Default is 1000 Kbps. Ignored if -C is given any
value other than "none".
-L logfile
Specifies the log file. Default is to write to stderr.
-B buf_size
The size in bytes of the UDP send buffer and receive buffer to
use. Valid values are 65536-104857600 (64KB-100MB). Defaults
to 262144.
-g max_log_size
Specifies the maximum log file size in MB. Once the log file
reaches this size, the file is renamed with a .1 extension and a
new log file is opened. For example, if the log file is
/tmp/uftp.log, it will be renamed /tmp/uftp.log.1 and a new
/tmp/uftp.log will be created. Ignored if -L is not specified.
Valid values are 1-1024. Default is no log rolling.
-n max_log_count
Specifies the maximum number of archive log files to keep when
log rolling is active. When the log file rolls, archive logs
are renamed with an incrementing numerical extension until the
max is reached. Archive log files beyond the maximum are
deleted. Ignored if -L and -g are not specified. Valid values
are 1-1000. Default is 5.
-Y keytype
The symmetric encryption algorithm to use. Valid values are
"des" for DES in CBC mode, "3des" for three key Triple DES in
CBC mode, "aes128-cbc", "aes256-cbc", "aes128-gcm",
"aes256-gcm", "aes128-ccm", "aes256-ccm", or "none" to not set
up encryption at all. The GCM and CCM modes are authenticated
encryption modes which applies a signatures at the same time as
encryption. If one of these modes are specifies, the value of
-w is ignored. Default is "none". Not all installations may
support all of these algorithms.
-h hashtype
The hashing algorithm to use for key derivation and HMAC
signatures. Valid values are "sha1" for SHA-1, "sha256" for
SHA-256, "sha384" for SHA-384, and "sha512" for SHA-512.
Defaults to "sha1". Ignored if -Y is "none". Not all
installations may support all of these algorithms.
-w sigtype
Specifies the type of signature to be applied to encrypted
messages. Valid values are "hmac" to apply an HMAC to the
encrypted message, and "keyex" to apply either an RSA or ECDSA
signature depending on the key exchange algorithm chosen via -e.
HMAC signatures are based off the group master key and ensure
the sender of a message is a valid member of the group, but does
not guarantee that the message came from a specific group
member. RSA and ECDSA signatures ensure that messages come from
a particular member, but is much much slower to calculate than
HMAC and creates a larger per-packet overhead. If the keytype
specified by -Y is an authentication mode cipher (i.e. AES in
GCM or CCM mode), this field is ignored and signatures will
instead be generated at the same time data is encrypted. This
also has the lowest size overhead and is the fastest. Default
is "hmac". Ignored if -Y is "none".
-e keyextype[:curve]
Specifies the key exchange algorithm to use. Valid values are
"rsa" for an RSA key exchange, "ecdh_rsa" for an Elliptic Curve
Diffie-Hellman (ECDH) key exchange with RSA signatures, and
"ecdh_ecdsa" for an ECDH key exchange with ECDSA signatures.
Using one of the ECDH schemes provides perfect forward security,
while using just RSA is slightly more resilient to replay
attacks. If ecdh_rsa or ecdh_ecdsa are chosen, the named EC
curve that the ECDH key is based on may optionally be selected,
with prime256v1 as the default (See -k and -K for the list of
available EC curves). Default key exchange scheme is "rsa".
Ignored if -Y is "none".
-c If specified, forces clients to authenticate by sending their
RSA public key in a CLIENT_KEY message. Client key fingerprints
and proxy key fingerprints specified by -H and -j respectively
will NOT be checked unless -c is specified. Ignored if -Y is
"none".
-m max_nak_count
Specifies the number of times a client reports naks beyond the
maximum percentage before getting dropped. Valid values are
1-10. Default is 1.
-k key_file
-K key_length | curve
These two options are used to read and/or write the server's
RSA/ECDSA private key. Both are ignored if -Y is "none".
The type of private key read/written depend on the key exchange
algorithm chosen via the -e option. If -e is "rsa" or
"ecdh_rsa", -K specifies the key length in bits of an RSA
public/private keypair to generate, and -k expects an RSA key.
If -e is "ecdh_ecdsa", -K specifies a named EC curve on which an
EC public/private keypair is generated, and -k expects an EC
key.
The list of supported EC curves is as follows (availability may
vary depending on system settings and crypto library used):
sect163k1 sect163r1 sect163r2 sect193r1 sect193r2 sect233k1
sect233r1 sect239k1 sect283k1 sect283r1 sect409k1 sect409r1
sect571k1 sect571r1 secp160k1 secp160r1 secp160r2 secp192k1
prime192v1 secp224k1 secp224r1 secp256k1 prime256v1 secp384r1
secp521r1
If neither -k nor -K are specified, either an RSA private key
512 bits in length or an EC private key on curve prime256p1
(depending on the value of -e) is generated but not persisted.
If -k is specified but not -K, the RSA or ECDSA private key is
read from key_file.
If -k is not specified but -K is, an RSA or ECDSA private key is
generated but not persisted.
If both -k and -K are specified, an RSA or ECDSA private key is
generated and stored in key_file.
The definition of key_file is dependent on the crypto library
UFTP is compiled to use.
On Windows systems, UFTP can built to use either CNG, which is
the new API supported by Windows Vista and Windows 7, or
CryptoAPI, which is the legacy API and the only one available to
Windows XP.
Under CryptoAPI, all RSA private keys must be stored in a key
container (technically only keys used to sign data, but for
UFTP's purposes this is the case). Key containers are internal
to Windows, and each user (and the system) has its own set of
key containers. In this case, key_file is actually the name of
the key container. When -k is not specified, the generated key
is not persisted. Elliptic Curve algorithms are not supported
under CryptoAPI.
Under CNG, RSA and ECDSA private keys are also stored in key
containers, and RSA keys created by CrypoAPI may be read by CNG.
Like CryptoAPI, key_file also specifies the key container name,
and the generated key is not persisted if -k is not specified.
CNG only supports 3 named EC curves: prime256v1, secp384r1, and
secp521r1.
All other systems use OpenSSL for the crypto library (although
under Windows UFTP can be also be built to use it). In this
case, key_file specifies a file name where the RSA private key
is stored unencrypted in PEM format (the OS is expected to
protect this file). When both -k and -K are specified, the file
is only written to if it does not currently exist. If the file
does exist, an error message will be returned and the server
will exit. When -k is not specified, the generated key is not
persisted. These PEM files may also be manipulated via the
openssl(1) command line tool.
Keys can also be generated and viewed via the uftp_keymgt(1)
utility.
-l Follow symbolic links. By default, if the server encounters a
symbolic link, it will send the link itself instead of the file
it points to. Specifying this flag causes the server to send
the file the link points to.
-T Print the timestamp on each line of output. If -L is specified,
this option is implied.
-b block_size
Specifies the size of a data block. This value should be around
100-200 bytes less that the path MTU to provide ample room for
all headers and extensions, up to and including the IP and UDP
headers. Prior to version 4.0, this option specified the MTU
and calculated the block size based on that. Default is 1300.
-t ttl Specifies the time-to-live for multicast packets. Default is 1.
-Q dscp
Specifies the Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP),
formerly Type of Service (TOS), in the IP header for all
outgoing packets. Valid values are 0-63 and may be specified in
either decimal or hexadecimal. Default is 0.
On Windows XP systems, the OS doesn't allow this parameter to be
changed by default. To change this, add/modify the following
DWORD registry value, set to 0, and reboot:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\Tcpip\Parameters\DisableUserTOSSetting
Not currently supported on Windows Vista or later.
-z Enables sync mode. Clients will check if an incoming file
exists. If so, the client will decline the incoming file if it
either older than the existing file or the same age and the same
size as the existing file.
As of version 4.1, parsable output that was previously generated
by this option is now enabled separately via the -S option.
-Z Sync preview mode. Works like sync mode, except no files are
actually transmitted, and the RESULT and STATS lines reflect the
status of each file had they actually been sent. The "time" and
"speed" datapoints are approximated based on the transmission
speed.
-I interface
The interface to send the data from. Can be specified either by
interface name, by hostname, or by IP. If not specified, the
default system interface is used.
-p port
The UDP port number to send to. Default is 1044.
-u source_port
The UDP port number to send from. Default is 0, which uses a
random port number.
-j proxylist_file
A file containing a list of proxies the server is expecting to
hear from. The file should contain the ID of a proxy optionally
followed by the proxy's public key fingerprint, with one on each
line. If a key fingerprint is given, the key specified by the
proxy must match the fingerprint. This option should not be
used without -H. If -H is specified, -j must also be specified
if proxies are expected to respond, otherwise the server will
reject the proxies.
Example contents:
0x00001111|66:1E:C9:1D:FC:99:DB:60:B0:1A:F0:8F:CA:F4:28:27:A6:BE:94:BC
0x00002222
-q Quit-on-error flag. Normally, the server will continue with a
session as long as at least one client is still active. With
this flag, the server will quit if any client aborts, drops out,
or never responds. Most useful in conjunction with clients
using the temp directory option (-T) so that clients that
successfully receive at least one file before being told to
abort don't have files from an aborted session in the
destination directory.
-f Restartable flag. If specified, and at least one client fails
to receive all files, the server will write a restart file named
"_group_{group ID}_restart in the current directory to save the
current state, which includes the group ID, list of files, and
list of failed clients. This file can then be passed to -F to
restart the failed transfer.
-y For Windows systems using CryptoAPI or CNG, private keys are
normally stored in the key container of the running user.
Specifying this option stores keys in the system key container.
On non-Windows systems, this option has no effect.
-U UID The unique ID for this server, specified as an 8 digit
hexadecimal number (0xnnnnnnnn). The default value is based on
the IP address of the outgoing multicast address as specified by
-I. If this address is IPv4, the UID is the address. If it is
IPv6, the UID is the last 4 bytes of the address.
-x log_level
Specifies current logging level. Valid values are 0-5, with 0
being the least verbose and 5 being the most verbose. Default
is 2, which is consistent with logging prior to version 3.5.
-W txweight
Sets the maximum file transfer time, expressed as a percentage
of the optimal time. Valid values are 110-10000. Ignored if
congestion control is enabled. Default is no maximum time.
-H { host[,host...] | @hostlist_file }
Specifies the clients for closed group membership. Can be
specified as either a comma separated list of client IDs, or can
be read from hostlist_file. This file is in the same format as
proxylist_file. Note that key fingerprints cannot be specified
using the comma separated syntax. Clients that are behind a
proxy do not need key fingerprints specified, since the proxy's
key fingerprint will be checked instead. If unspecified, open
group membership is used, and any client may register.
-F restart_file
Specifies the name of a restart file to use to resume a failed
transfer. If specified, -H may not be specified and all files
listed to send will be ignored, since the restart file contains
both of these. All other command line options specified on the
first attempt are not automatically applied, so you can alter
then for the next attempt if need be.
-X exclude_file
A file containing the names of files/paths to be excluded from
the session, one per line. For example, if you send a directory
called d1 containing subdirectories d2, d3, and d4, and you
don't want to send the contents of d4, the exclude_file should
contain a line reading "d1/d4".
-M pub_multicast_addr
The public address to announce on. May be either a multicast
address or a unicast address, and either IPv4 or IPv6. If a
unicast address is specified, the -P option is ignored and all
data moves over the specified unicast address. If a multicast
IPv6 address is specified, -P must also be specified. Default
is 230.4.4.1.
-P priv_multicast_addr
The private multicast address that the data is transferred to.
One or more parts of the IP address (other that the first) may
be replaced with the letter 'x', resulting in a random number
being chosen for that part, either 0-255 for IPv4 or 0-0xFFFF
for IPv6. Default value is 230.5.5.x. If clients are using
source specific multicast (SSM), this and -M must specify valid
SSM addresses, which fall in the range 232.0.0.0/8 for IPv4 and
ff3x::/32 for IPv6 (here x specifies the multicast scope). The
values for -M and -P must both be the same IP version.
-N max_nak_pct
Specifies the maximum percentage of NAKs that a client can
report for a particular section. This option works with the -m
option, which specifies the number of times a client may exceed
this limit before getting dropped. This allows the server to
keep a very slow client from stalling the session for others.
Valid values are 0-100. Default is 100.
-C cc_type
Specifies the congestion control mode to use. Currently
supported values are "none" and "tfmcc". Specifying "none"
means data will be sent at a fixed rate as specified by the -R
option. Specifying "tfmcc" will use the TCP Friendly Multicast
Congestion Control scheme as specified in RFC 4654. Normally
TFMCC will limit the rate based strictly on loss, however a
minimum, maximum, and initial rate in Kbps may each be
optionally specified for TFMCC mode as
"tfmcc:min=min_rate:init=init_rate:max=max_rate", and any or all
of these may be applied and in any order. Default value is
"none".
TFMCC will make use of the Explicit Congestion Notification
(ECN) bits in the IP header on systems that support it natively.
Known supported systems are Linux, FreeBSD, Windows XP (sender
only), Windows Vista and later (receiver only), and Solaris
(sender only).
-o
-D dest_name
These options specify the name given to the sent file(s) on the
client side. If only one file/directory is specified to send
and -o is not specified, the name specified by -D is given to
that file/directory, and the effects of -E are ignored. If more
than one file/directory is specified to send, or if -o is
specified, they are placed in a subdirectory with the name
specified by -D.
This option may also specify an absolute path name. If so,
clients must be either all Windows or all UNIX-like, since they
have differing filesystem structures, otherwise the behavior is
undefined. The server, however, need not be the same OS as the
clients. When specifying an absolute path name, the path must
be contained in one of a client's destination directories,
otherwise the client will reject the file. When sending to
Windows clients, an absolute path may be either local
(drive:\path\to\file) or remote (\\host\share\path\to\file).
-E base_dir[,base_dir...]
Specifies one or more "base" directories for files. Normally,
for any file/directory specified, any leading path elements are
stripped from the name before sending. If the specified
file/directory name matches one of the base directories, only
the path elements of the base directory are stripped, and the
remainder is sent as the file name. Any specified
file/directory that does not match a base directory is skipped.
For example, without -E, if you pass /path/to/file to send, the
transmitted filename is file. If you pass in -E /path, the
transmitted file name is to/file.
-S status_file
Prints easily parsable status information to a file. This
information was previously only available in sync mode (-z) and
was mixed with the normal logging output. Setting this option
to @LOG results in status info being mixed with normal logging
output.
The following is printed for each client after all have
registered:
CONNECT;status;target
Where "status" is either "success" or "failed", and "target" is
the name of the client.
The following is printed after each file:
RESULT;target;filename;size;status;speed
Where "target" is the name of the client, "filename" is the name
of the current file, "size" is the size of the file in kilobytes
(i.e. 1234KB), "speed" is the transmission speed for that file
in KB/s, and status is:
copy: The file was sent.
overwrite: The file was sent, and overwrote an existing file.
Only generated in sync mode.
skipped: The file was declined by the client because it is older
that the existing file. Only generated in sync mode.
rejected: The file was rejected, because the file was sent with
an absolute pathname and either the client is using a temp
directory or the filename doesn't match one of the client's
destination directories.
The following is printed at the end of the session:
STATS;target;num_copy;num_overwrite;num_skip;total_size;time;speed
Where "target" is the name of the client, "num_copy" is the
number of files sent with "copy" status, "num_overwrite" is the
number of files sent with "overwrite" status, "num_skip" is the
number of files sent with "skipped" status, "total_size" is the
total size of all files sent in kilobytes, "time" is the total
transmission time for all files, and "speed" is the overall
transmission speed for all files.
Also, the following line is printed verbatim prior to the STATS
lines for ease of reading:
HSTATS;target;copy;overwrite;skip;totalKB;time;speedKB/s
-r init_grtt[:min_grtt:max_grtt]
Specifies the initial value, and optionally the min and max
values, of the Group Round Trip Time (GRTT) used in timing
calculations. The GRTT changes dynamically based on the network
conditions. This option is useful if the initial connection
period is too short or long, if receivers are getting bogged
down and cannot respond to the server quick enough before timing
out, or if receivers are getting flagged with too high of an RTT
and take too long to recover to a reasonable value. Valid
values are 0.001 to 1000. Defaults are 0.5 for init_grtt, 0.01
for min_grtt, and 15.0 for max_grtt.
-s robust
Specifies the robustness factor for message retransmission. The
server will resend particular messages up to robust times while
waiting for client responses. Valid values are 10-50. Default
is 20.
-i list_file
Name of a file containing a list of files to send, one per line.
Empty lines are ignored. Passing in '-' for list_file reads
files from stdin. Other files specified on the command line are
ignored if -i is given.
file [ file...]
The file(s) or directory(ies) to send. Any special files
(block/character devices, pipes, sockets, etc.) are skipped. By
default, any symbolic links are sent as links (see -l). Any
Windows client will silently refuse to create them. If -F or -i
is specified, any files listed will be ignored.
There are also special metafile names that can send commands to
the clients. The @DELETE:{filename} metafile instructs the
client to delete the given filename. The usual rules regarding
which of the client's destination directories to use also
applies here. The @FREESPACE metafile will cause the client to
report back the amount of free disk space in the primary
destination directory.
EXAMPLES
Starting with the default options:
uftp the_file
The server sends the_file with no encryption at 1000 Kbps, sending
announcements over 230.4.4.1 and later messages over 230.5.5.x (x is
randomly selected). Any client that responds to the announcement will
be accepted. The payload portion of the packets will be 1300 bytes.
To send at 50 Mbps:
uftp -R 50000 the_file
Or to allow the transmission rate to be determined dynamically:
uftp -C tfmcc the_file
To send multiple files:
uftp file_1 file_2 file_3
or:
uftp dir_1 dir_2 file_3
To send multiple files that all land in a certain subdirectory on each
client:
uftp -D dest_dir file_1 file_2
To send announcements over multicast address 224.1.2.3 and later
messages over 224.4.5.6:
uftp -M 224.1.2.3 -P 224.4.5.6 file
Or for IPv6:
uftp -M ff02::1:2:3 -P ff02::4:5:6 file
Or in unicast mode:
uftp -M host_or_ip file
Where host_or_ip is the hostname or unicast IP address of the host to
send to.
To send only to certain hosts:
uftp -H client_id_1,client_id_2,client_id_3 file_to_send
or:
uftp -H @file_containing_list_of_clients file_to_send
If you want to use jumbo ethernet frames of 9000 bytes (leaving 200
bytes of space for headers):
uftp -b 8800 file_to_send
To send /path/to/file1 and /path/to/file2, and have them appear on
clients as /remote/dir/to/file1 and /remote/dir/to/file2:
uftp -E /path -D /remote/dir /path/to/file1 /path/to/file2
To send a file encrypted with AES-256-CBC and SHA-1 hashing, using an
autogenerated 512-bit RSA key to negotiate the session:
uftp -Y aes256-cbc -h sha1 file_to_send
To do the above with a previously generated RSA key stored in
key_file_or_container (under Windows, the name of an internal key
container, otherwise the name of a file containing the key in PEM
format):
uftp -Y aes256-cbc -h sha1 -k key_file_or_container file_to_send
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
0 The file transfer session finished with at least one client
receiving at least one file.
1 An invalid command line parameter was specified.
2 An error occurred while attempting to initialize network
connections.
3 An error occurred while reading or generating cryptographic key
data.
4 An error occurred while opening or rolling the log file.
5 A memory allocation error occurred.
6 The server was interrupted by the user.
7 No client responded to the ANNOUNCE message.
8 No client responded to a FILEINFO message.
9 All client either dropped out of the session or aborted. Also
returned if one client drops out or aborts when -q is specified.
10 The session completed, but none of the specified files were
received by any client.
SEE ALSO
uftpd(1), uftpproxyd(1), uftp_keymgt(1)
NOTES
The latest version of UFTP can be found at http://uftp-
multicast.sourceforge.net. UFTP is covered by the GNU General Public
License. Commercial licenses and support are available from Dennis
Bush (bush@tcnj.edu).
UFTP 4.8 5 January 2016 uftp(1)